The study of cellular cytotoxicity of argireline - an anti-aging peptide.
Grosicki. Marek M; Latacz. Gniewomir G; Szopa. Annamaria A; Cukier. Anna A; Kieć-Kononowicz. Katarzyna K
Key Findings
- Argireline caused dose‑dependent inhibition of cell proliferation in kidney, neuroblastoma, and primary skin fibroblast cells.
- The concentration needed to halve cell viability (IC50) was 18‑to‑10,000 × higher than that of the chemotherapy drug doxorubicin, indicating low cytotoxicity.
- Even at the highest tested doses, the peptide’s toxicity was far above the levels normally applied in cosmetic products.
Practical Outcomes
- For DIY skin‑care or N=1 experiments, using Argireline at standard cosmetic concentrations is unlikely to harm cells, so it can be applied safely topically. Only avoid extremely high, non‑cosmetic doses (e.g., millimolar levels) if you’re testing the peptide in vitro or in unconventional delivery methods.
Summary
The study looked at how toxic the anti‑wrinkle peptide Argireline (acetyl‑hexapeptide‑3) is to different human cells. It found that Argireline does reduce cell growth, but only at concentrations that are dozens to thousands of times higher than the amounts used in skin creams, making it appear quite safe for typical topical use.
Abstract
Argireline is well know, innovative anti-aging product used in the cosmetic market. This short chain peptide is used as active ingredient in dermal ointment and creams. Argireline prevents formation of skin lines and wrinkles in a very similar way to the botulinum toxin (Botox), inhibiting neurotransmitter release at the neuromuscular junction. Argireline does not require under skin muscle injections and it is believed to be relatively safe. However, despite the fact that some toxicity data has been provided by the product manufacturer, there is an evident lack of reliable information about cytotoxicity of argireline in the literature. The aim of the presented study was to estimate the antiproliferation effect of argireline solution in several concentrations. The influence of argireline on cellular proliferation was examined against: human embryonic kidney HEK-293 cell line, human neuroblastoma IMR-32 cell line, and human primary skin fibroblasts. Tests were performed using formazan-based cell proliferation assay: EZ4U, which allows to measure the efficiency of mitochondrial oxidative activity in living cells. The argireline inhibitory concentration, IC50 values were calculated and the results were compared to the IC50 value of the reference compound: doxorubicin. In conclusion, the considered method resulted in dose-dependent argireline anti-proliferation effects. However, the significant cytotoxicity of argireline solution was observed under 18 to 10 000 fold higher concentrations (depending on cells that were examined) in comparison to doxorubicin.
Study Information
pubmed
2014
2014-03-17T00:00:00.000Z